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Everything about William D Eckert totally explained

William Dole Eckert (January 20, 1909 in Freeport, Illinois - April 16, 1971) was a lieutenant general in the United States Air Force, and later the 4th commissioner of Major League Baseball from 1965 to 1968.

Before baseball

Eckert, who grew up in Madison, Indiana, graduated from the United States Military Academy in June 1930. It was there that Eckert earned the nickname "Spike" while playing football. He then attended the Air Corps Flying Schools at Brooks and Kelly Fields in San Antonio, Texas, graduating in October 1931.
   In 1938, he was selected as one of two officers for advanced education at the Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration and graduated with a Master's Degree in June 1940.
   In 1957, at the age of 48, Eckert was commissioned lieutenant general, making him the youngest three-star officer in the United States Armed Forces.
   Just before becoming the commissioner, Eckert worked as a management consultant to the aviation industry. During this period, he served on the boards of directors of several corporations.

Tenure as Commissioner of Major League Baseball

More than 150 names appeared on the original list of nominees for the commissionership following Ford Frick's retirement. The club owners initially, were unable to decide if the next commissioner should come from the ranks of the game (for example, the president of the American or National Leagues), or elsewhere. They finally decided that the new commissioner should have a strong business background to deal with the problems that were confronting the game at the time.
   Eckert only became a serious candidate for the commissionership after fellow officer Curtis LeMay gave Major League Baseball a recommendation for Eckert. On November 17, 1965, by a unanimous vote of the then, 20 major league club owners, William Eckert became the 4th Commissioner of Major League Baseball.
   When he became commissioner, Eckert hadn't seen a game in person in over 10 years. He was a compromise choice for the job, previously being so obscure that sportswriters nicknamed him "the Unknown Soldier."
   He incurred the public's ire by refusing to cancel games after the assassinations of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy and Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., and team owners' disdain because he refused to deal forcefully with substantive business issues. Anticipating a players' strike and having no ownership confidence in his ability to handle the situation, Eckert was forced to resign at the end of the 1968 season although he still had three years on his contract.
   In spite of his much publicized failures and shortcomings, William Eckert also developed more effective committee actions, streamlined business methods and helped stabilize franchises with bigger stadiums and long-term leases. In addition, Eckert worked hard toward promoting the game internationally, including a 1966 tour of Japan by the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Aftermath

Due to his contract terms, Eckert continued to receive his salary after his days as the baseball commissioner were over.
   Eckert's successor (Bowie Kuhn) was no more successful at preventing a players' strike than he'd been.

References in popular culture

Los Angeles sports columnist Jim Murray ended a column with a hypothetical quote from Eckert: "I wish everyone a happy and prosperous 1897!"
   In a 1967 Peanuts comic strip, Charlie Brown's pitcher's mound gets washed away by a heavy rainstorm. Lucy then suggests, "Why don't you send a letter to Commissioner Eckert, and have him send you a new one?" Charlie Brown thinks little of this idea.

Further Information

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